Anthony is a Senior Global Technologist, working in Product Strategy and the Office of the CTO at Veeam. Anthony focuses on Veeam’s Cloud and Service Provider technologies and partners along with automation, IaC and modern application platforms. Anthony previously held architectural lead roles at some of Australia's leading Cloud providers. At Veeam, he is responsible for generating content, evangelism, collecting product feedback, presenting at major events and engaging with Analyst and Media as an official Veeam spokesperson. With a Master’s Degree in Network and System Administration (Distinction) from Charles Sturt, he can be found blogging at anthonyspiteri.net or hosting the Great Things with Great Tech Podcast at gtwgt.com
Thank you for the video and all the information. we´re currently struggling on setting up the restore portal itself. It would be helpful to know, what you have done on the Azure Tenant on SP Side (permissions, etc.).
There are so many things I am not clear on here and this is exactly why I cannot use Kubernetes because the instructions and explanations are not clear. How does rook know which drives to make into osds? What is your hardware here? We need a shot of the actual hardware so we can understand what you’re doing here. It honestly seems like kubernetes was designed to make people not understand it.
Hi I am getting the following error after running toolkit health: HEALTH_WARN OSD count 0 < osd_pool_default_size 3 Also after running lsblk -f, I am not getting sdb, just sda which has sda1 and sda2 in it
You said there was a network error. What did you do to make the website load e.g. ufw? I followed step-by-step but couldn't get the webpage to load. My domain / dns is configured and fully propagated.
should we deploy ceph inside kubernetes cluster? I mean, what if something happened to the cluster than we wouldn't have access to our PVs and PVCs. Is it possible to integrate ceph with proxmox and than use it inside the kubernetes? What is the best practice here?
Thank you for your tut. I read a lot Veeam doc but difficult to confirm if client on premise can connect to Cloud VM (with cloud VM IP is in production onpremise network). So the two network NEA make L2 tunnel make it work?
Hello There. Thank you for the video. I have followed each and every step which really went well but failing on the SSL part. I have setup a UBUNTU VM on my vmware host and port forwarded ports 80/443 still no luck. My DNS is cloudfare and have got A record pointing to my public IP still does not work. Any help greatly appreciated. Thank you
Being able to recover workloads directly from Object Storage without having to stage data locally is a huge advantage that Veeam offers. Put together with automation there is no better pairing for On-Demand Recovery, migration or dev/test uses cases with Veeam into a VMware Cloud.
This is really great. I'm just finishing a project to leverage sobr and s3 bucket and we use vmware cloud. One quick question for you Anthony.. is there any word on vmware cloud allowing more veeam features such as instant recovery? I understand it doesn't allow nfs servers and this is why it is a limitation per veeam documentation on vmware cloud.